Controversial for-profit plasma clinic now fully operational in Moncton - Action News
Home WebMail Friday, November 22, 2024, 07:09 AM | Calgary | -12.8°C | Regions Advertise Login | Our platform is in maintenance mode. Some URLs may not be available. |
New Brunswick

Controversial for-profit plasma clinic now fully operational in Moncton

Canadian Plasma Resources has opened its clinic in Moncton and is booking appointments for its first donors, despite continued controversy over paying people for plasma.

CEO hoping to sell pharmaceutical products made from plasma back to Canadians

Canadian Plasma Resources has opened a clinic in Moncton and is now booking appointments for its first donors in spite of continued controversy about paying people for plasma. (CBC)

After months of controversy and opposition, aprivate, for-profit clinicthat pays donors to give the blood product plasma is now fully operational in Moncton.

The Canadian Plasma Resources clinic was issued its federal licence on July 17.

Donors can visit the clinic at least once a week and receive $25 per donation, which is paid via cash card.

"We are hoping that we will bring this product and sell it through Canadian Blood Services for Canadian patients," saidBarzin Bahardoust, CEO of the Canadian Plasma Resources.

Canadian Plasma Resources CEO Barzin Bahardoust says he would prefer to keep plasma collected from paid donors in Canada by selling it to Canadian Blood Services, but Canadian Blood Services doesn't plan to buy it. (Radio-Canada)

But Canadian Blood ServicesCEO Dr. Graham Sher said last year that the organization was not planning on doing business with Bahardoust's plasma clinic.

"There's a big differentiator between Canadian Blood Services and an enterprise that is for-profit, that is paying donors and that is not assuring Canadians that the product is going to stay in Canada to serve the needs of Canadians," Sher said.

How it works

Bahardoust said the plasma collected from donors will be sent to a lab,Biotest, in Frankfurt, Germany, for processing into pharmaceutical products.

"Typically, from the time that the plasma is collected until the first batch of product is created from that plasma is a period between six months to one year," Bahardoust said.

Bahardoust said he hopes to eventually have the processing done at a plant being built in the Montreal area.

He said the plasma creates productsthat includeimmune globulin for patients with immunodeficiencies; human albumin, used to treat trauma or burn patients; and clotting factors 8 and 9, used to treat hemophilia A and B.

"A litre of plasma [is] typically worth around $400 from each litre," he said. "The raw material represents about half that added value per litre, so around $200 dollars per litre. What we collect from a donor is around three-quarters of a litre, about $150 in terms of commercial market value."

Concerns over expansion

In a statement, Canadian Blood Services said it is monitoring the clinic in Moncton and another in Saskatoon. The statement said the clinics won't have much impact onthe national blood system unless they expand.

Canadian Blood Services CEO Dr. Graham Sher says the organization has no plans to do business with Canadian Plasma Resources, which compensates donors for plasma. (Canadian Blood Services)

"Canadian Blood Services' concern is different, however, with the expansion of such an operator to multiple sites across the country, or with the potential emergence of additional or larger-scale commercial operators that pay plasma donors," Canadian Blood Services said.

Preys on vulnerable, union says

The clinic has generated opposition for more than a year, and the controversy didn't let up once the doors officially opened.

"This will erode our public blood collection system, which is a step backward," said Daniel Lgre, president of the Canadian Union of Public Employees in New Brunswick.

Lgre said by offering money for plasma, the clinic is taking advantage of the most vulnerable and poor in the community. He's also concerned about the impact on those with addictions.

"Money's tight," he said. "People are looking at a way of getting a little extra revenue. And selling your blood plasma is a way of doing that. We've got a lot of people who will go that route."

Plasma clinics are regulated by the federal government.

No measures are being taken by the provincial government to prohibit private, paying plasma clinics in New Brunswick,said Department of Health spokespersonVeronique Taylor.